Sungmin Cho , The Center for Advanced Research in Software Engineering, The University of Texas at Austin

Christine Julien , The Center for Advanced Research in Software Engineering, The University of Texas at Austin

ABSTRACT

Acquiring local context information and sharing it among co-located devices is critical for emerging pervasive computing applications. The devices belonging to a group of co-located people may need to detect a shared activity (e.g., a meeting) to adapt their devices to support the activity. Today's devices are almost universally equipped with device-to-device communication that easily enables direct context sharing. While existing context sharing models tend not to consider devices' resource limitations or users' constraints, enabling devices to directly share context has significant benefits for efficiency, cost, and privacy. However, as we demonstrate quantitatively, when devices share context via device-to-device communication, it needs to be represented in a size-efficient way that does not sacrifice its expressiveness or accuracy. We present Chitchat, a suite of context representations that allows application developers to tune tradeoffs between the size of the representation, the flexibility of the application to update context information, the energy required to create and share context, and the quality of the information shared. We can substantially reduce the size of context representation (thereby reducing applications' overheads when they share their contexts with one another) with only a minimal reduction in the quality of shared contexts.